7488001. If you are recently unemployed, special line for you this morning 202 7488002. You can also send us a text, 202 7488003. If you do, please include your name and where you are from. Otherwise catch up with us on social media. On twitter it is cspanwj. On facebook it is facebook. Com cspan. A very good friday morning to you. President trump released his new guidance yesterday as the Labor Department announced another 5. 2 million americans have filed for unemployment last week as the Washington Times notes that raises the jobless claims for the month to about 22 million. Not since the Great Depression of the 1930s have so many people been thrown out of work so quickly. Reason, the white house argues, to get a plan in place to open the economy. This was President Trump yesterday. [video clip] believesam of experts we can begin the next front in our war, which we are calling opening up america again, and that is what we are doing. We are opening up our country. And we have to do t
Pivoting to the economy. The latest plan is to leave the medical advice to the experts after the president dangerously suggested that injecting disinfek ta disinfectants into people might help kbil the virus. Dr. Sanjay gupta is with us and there Jeanne Marrazzo from the university of alabama at birmingham. The director of the division of infectious diseases. Great to see both of you this morning. Were about to engage in a national experiment. Basically, it starts this week with at least 13 states, sanjay, now opening a significant portion of their business. Im just wondering, as a doctor, how nervous does this make you . Obviously staying at home forever is unsustainable. It seems like were getting to the Tipping Point where people are very, very anxious to get back to work. When you see the red, that map there, how anxious does it make you . It makes me nervous. I mean, i think that people may engage in better practicing of physical distancing even if things reopen. I mean, i think t
A recent study published in NEJM Evidence found that feeding children peanut products regularly from infancy to age five reduced the rate of peanut allergy in adolescence by 71%, providing long-term prevention through early allergen consumption
Parents who start feeding peanut products to their children very early, from infancy to age 5, help drastically reduce the risk the child will become allergic to peanuts later.
New evidence suggests that feeding children smooth peanut butter during infancy and early childhood can help reduce their risk of developing a peanut allergy even years later.